Canadian Universities/Colleges and Sat?

<p>Hi, I have a question in regards to Canada and the dreaded SAT. My friend and I want to go to Canada but we are struggling to understand how this works. I was studying in central america, on a english spoken school, so you can say it followed the american curriculum, then I moved to brazil. Right now im being home schooled via an online school, so I am very confused on how the application proccess is going to work out for my case and my friend is also studying in central america (keep in mind this school does offer the SAT). Thing is he has a Canadian citizenship, so he doesn't know if that counts towards somehing in regards of the SAT and stuff. </p>

<p>I am planning on studying Physical Science/Kinesiology and my friend is looking to get into a Music program, so far the universities/colleges we found that seem to have no problem with the SAT are Humber and Concordia, if you guys have other suggestions please feel free to list them. Thanks Hopefully you understand our question, and may clear up this information for us, if you need any more information please ask. Thanks :D</p>

<p>So what exactly is your question</p>

<p>Why not take the SAT if you can? Most colleges will want them. It’s a standardized test that consists of a brief essay, reading comprehension, vocabulary, and mathematics. </p>

<p>Fortunately, the upcoming October test is offered for international students.</p>

<p>Some info here: [SAT</a> Testing - For International Students](<a href=“http://professionals.collegeboard.com/testing/international/sat]SAT”>SAT International Testing – SAT Suite | College Board)</p>

<p>List of codes to search by country: <a href=“College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools”>College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools;

<p>If you live farther than 121km/75mi from a testing location, you can request that the CollegeBoard open one for you. You can search which locations are in your country when you go to sign up. It costs $49 to take a test.</p>